https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4887x5kh

The Evidentiary Politics of the Geoengineering Imaginary
2018
Author(s): Flegal, Jane A.Advisor(s): Winickoff, DavidMeckling, Jonas
This dissertation investigates the ways in which societies are coming to
know and govern solar geoengineering. The question at the heart of this
dissertation is not whether solar geoengineering will succeed, or even
whether it should, but rather what makes it --- and its governance ---
imaginable. To this end, the bulk of this dissertation aimed to analyze the
co-production of the evidence --- and governance assumptions --- for a
sociotechnical system that does not yet exist. To do so, I draw on work in
science and technology studies (STS) and political science to elucidate and
analyze the political and scientific claims underpinning expert attempts to
capture the public imagination and put solar geoengineering on mainstream
public policy agendas. I argue that the ability to put an emerging
technology on the public agenda constitutes an exercise of power,
determined neither by social structures nor entrepreneurial social actors
alone, and entails its own, oft-neglected, evidentiary politics.

Decades of scholarship in the interpretive social sciences demonstrates
that framing and producing technoscience requires imaginative as much as
technical work. Sheila Jasanoff's concept of `sociotechnical imaginaries'
offers a useful point of entry into these dynamics. Sociotechnical
imaginaries describe ``collectively held, institutionally stabilized, and
publicly performed visions of desirable futures'' co-produced with advances
in science and technology. As a theoretical concept, imaginaries help to
explain why some visions of scientific and social order are co-produced,
while others are not. Coupling this work with responsible research and
innovation (RRI), which is concerned with the responsible steering of
technoscientific developments, draws attention to the ways these
imaginaries may play a vital role in the development, assessment, and
governance of emerging technologies in the present, making scrutiny of
their content and prospects for institutionalization urgent and timely.

Any social scientific study of solar-geoengineering-in-the-making presents
challenges for the analyst, some of which are shared across `emerging
technologies,' and some of which are unique to this topic, at least at this
stage. For one, the supply of research on solar geoengineering --- social
scientific and otherwise --- has outpaced any demand function. It is not
yet a topic of research in the private sector, nor is it entangled in
broader imaginaries of national identity or competitiveness, though this
may change. As Steve Rayner has pointed out, solar geoengineering is at a
research impasse. Moreover, the primacy of models as an evidentiary basis
for contemplating solar geoengineering has contributed to its stabilization
as an object of governance before we know much about what it is likely to
become, or even whether it is doable at all. This has contributed to a set
of early assumptions about solar geoengineering (for example, as cheap and
easy, or likely to make things better or worse for specific people in
specific places) that need to be revisited. In this supply-driven context,
the visions of a relatively narrow set of actors --- and narrow kinds of
evidence --- are forming the foundation for future policy regimes.

In Evoking equity as a rationale for solar geoengineering research?
Scrutinizing emerging expert visions of equity, I examine the scientization
of debates about the equity implications of solar geoengineering research.
In so doing, I identify three sets of equity-related arguments advanced by
sociotechnical vanguards advocating for more solar geoengineering research.
The first is a call for more research as a means to shed light on the
distributional outcomes of envisioned futures with and without solar
geoengineering. This includes a call to reduce uncertainties inherent in
scientific models examining distributional outcomes of potential deployment
of solar geoengineering. Accompanying such calls is a discernible shift in
the content of science itself, from more extreme to more `realistic'
modeled scenarios of deployment, and from consideration of global to
regional effects. The second equity-related rationale for more research is
a call for comparative risk-risk assessment, underpinned by the claim that
equity demands that potential risks and benefits of solar geoengineering be
compared to the risks of climate change itself, especially for vulnerable
populations. The third equity-related rationale for more solar
geoengineering research is the invocation of the 1.5 degree aspirational
goal of the Paris Agreement as requiring research on solar geoengineering,
out of concern for the global poor and those most vulnerable to the
consequences of climate change.

My research suggests reveals several implications of this expert-driven,
outcome-oriented, and risk-based understanding of equity. First, it may
suggest that more research on solar geoengineering is the only rational
choice, since many of the relevant equity concerns are empirical matters,
amenable to resolution through the provision of more science. Second, it
sidesteps the question of whether and how diverse non-experts should have a
say in whether and how such research moves forward --- even if it is to
occur on their behalf, in part by assuming that climate-related preferences
are knowable and quantifiable. Third, the focus on predicting the outcomes
of any future deployment at this stage represents an exercise in
speculative ethics, and risks ignoring alternative ways of thinking about
equity and responsibility in the context of technological innovation.
Finally, I suggest that further analysis should be directed toward whether
the vanguard visions I explore reflect a broader shift in operationalizing
equity within multilateral climate politics, with those bearing the
greatest responsibility now recast as `risk managers' on behalf of the
global poor and the vulnerable. I argue that those characterized as `the
vulnerable' in expert discourses should regain their status as agential
subjects, rather than remain undifferentiated objects in expert discourse.
Empirical research suggests that publics have a set of concerns not
captured in the approach to equity I analyze in this dissertation,
including issues around moral responsibility, historical global injustices,
the ability to be included in, and benefit from, technological development,
and concerns around lack of agency and self-determination in shaping
innovation pathways.

In The Politics of Climate Models for Solar Geoengineering Research, I
argue that there is an oft-neglected politics of evidence around attempts
to put emerging topics on the formal public agenda, which has the potential
to shape future policy regimes. In this chapter, I analyze the mutual
construction of solar geoengineering modeling and policy framing. Climate
models have been understood as important nodes at the interface of climate
science and policy, and as capable of shaping societies' understanding of,
and responses to, climate change. As other scholars have pointed out, less
has been said about the development of this relationship over time, which
can help explain how it is that the intersection of modeling and politics
takes on the form that it does.

There are at least two issues around uncertainty and representation in the
use of climate models for knowledge about solar geoengineering, which raise
questions at the intersection of modeling and politics. The first is that
models are being used to represent technologies which do not yet exist,
black-boxing the engineering in geoengineering ideas. As one interviewee
stated, ``In the model, you can just make geoengineering work. You can just
assume that the oceans have a higher albedo because of ocean bubbles,
whether it's possible or not.'' This results in the management of the
representation of a technology in models, rather than managing the
development of the technology itself, eliding important near-term questions
around the complexities of technology development and the structure of
responsible research programs, and stabilizing solar geoengineering as an
object of governance in potentially problematic ways. Secondly, there is
significant debate about whether these models can usefully predict outcomes
at all; uncertainties that may be less relevant to models of and for
climate science and mitigation policy may become `matters of concern' when
it comes to predicting or promising regarding the effects of geoengineering.

I argue that imaginaries of solar geoengineering technologies --- despite
not serving current regulatory demands, and despite the non-existence of
the technologies themselves (perhaps because of it) --- are engaging
directly with policy needs (both current and predicted). With regard to
current needs, the focus on models as proxies for actual deployment of
these imagined technologies has the effect of making it seem as though
societies `know' more about whether and how to develop these techniques
than they do, which is resulting in debates about the management of the
representation of a technology which does not yet exist. This has
contributed to the current research impasse, in which ``technologists await
a green light from social scientists before proceeding with research, while
social scientists are limited to commenting on highly speculative ideas
about how geoengineering might turn out in practice.'' In this context,
policymakers are avoiding decisions regarding the advisability of a
research program aimed at answering societally-relevant questions about
technology development, and are content to fund indoor modeling studies.
Alternatively, one might argue that the existing settlement, at least in
the US, between governments, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and
scientists, in which governments seem willing to fund indoor modeling
studies but accept an informal moratorium on everything else, may itself be
a kind of clumsy solution, the stability of which depends on its
non-articulation.

There is a broader question around displacement in the realm of climate
policy raised by this research. Several scholars and commentators have
raised questions about the role of imagined technologies in the present,
especially since the 2015 Paris climate agreement. As Steve Rayner has
pointed out, the agreement maintains the belief that global temperature
targets are achievable via the inclusion of imaginary technologies, which
represents a kind of `magical thinking.' Noting that the line between
ambition and delusion is not always sharp, Rayner argues that the reality
seems to be that the world is already likely to exceed the temperature
limit agreed to absent some form of geoengineering. Despite this reality,
the inclusion of climate engineering technologies in modeled scenarios has
the effect of making political targets seem achievable. This is true even
without any instrumental action --- and potential near-term political costs
--- to policymakers when it comes to actually funding research and
development on these imagined technologies, and assessing their impacts and
implications.

Finally, in Climate Researchers' Views of Solar Geoengineering: Benefits,
Risks, and Governance, I present the results of the first survey of climate
change researchers' views of solar geoengineering research and its
appropriate oversight. I argue that definitions of `expert' in emerging
domains is itself a contested political category, and far from
straightforward, particularly when the technologies under consideration do
not yet exist. Respondents in this survey, much like surveys of general
publics, report concern about the moral hazard operating at the level of
political decision-making. Nevertheless, respondents generally support
research on solar geoengineering, including small-scale outdoor studies ---
despite both a general concern that research may result in lock-in and
slippery slopes to deployment, and skepticism about the advisability of
ever deploying these techniques. I find strong support for some form of
novel or supplementary governance arrangement(s) for research, and a belief
that scientific self-regulation is insufficient to manage risks. There
seems to be less agreement, however, on particular governance approaches; I
find mixed responses regarding the desirability of a `physical thresholds'
approach to governing geoengineering experiments, for example.

Despite the fact that most respondents express skepticism about the
desirability of future deployment, respondents tend to support more
research into these techniques, both indoor and, to a lesser extent,
outdoors. This might be explained by a view that research will reveal
reasons not to move forward, or because of a belief that concerns about
slippery slopes are overstated (although this seems less likely, given that
most respondents report concern that research may result in lock-in and
slippery slopes to deployment). Alternatively, a substantial number of
researchers surveyed here may have an interest in scientific research
moving forward in general, irrespective of its strategic aims. Respondents
express skepticism about prediction and controllability when it comes to
solar geoengineering deployment. It remains an open question whether a
desirable future world with solar geoengineering would depend upon
predicting such outcomes, although most respondents do report a belief that
uncertainty in our understanding of the climate system means we should
never deploy solar geoengineering.

Given low awareness of solar geoengineering, participation by a narrow set
of actors --- including scientists, but also those who claim to represent
the views of civil society --- can close down discussion of this imaginary
technology, rather than open it up. In this way, the views of relevant but
disempowered publics are assumed before most people have even heard of
these ideas. It remains to be seen whether and how early visions of solar
geoengineering will cohere or acquire collective stability, or whether they
will be radically disrupted. My hope is that the data and analysis in this
dissertation may prove useful in tracing the evolution of solar
geongineering and its governance over time.

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